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Radiation
therapy technique reduces length of Prostate
Cancer treatment
Newswise — Breihan
Bridgewater suffers from emphysema. He
sleeps on his side because when he lays flat
on his back it feels like there’s a boulder
resting on his chest.
When the 74-year-old
semi-retired electronic technician was
diagnosed with prostate cancer, the thought
of undergoing surgery or having to lie on
his back and undergo more than 40 radiation
treatments left him with an uneasy feeling –
and a decision to make.
The Lewisville resident
decided he would not seek treatment for his
early-stage prostate cancer.
After Mr. Bridgewater
told his UT Southwestern Medical Center
doctors that the decision was determined
because he didn’t believe he could withstand
the standard treatment for prostate cancer,
they referred him to Dr. Robert Timmerman,
vice chairman of radiation oncology.
Dr. Timmerman is
leading a national clinical trial testing
the effectiveness of stereotactic body
radiation therapy (SBRT) to treat prostate
cancer in five, 30-minute sessions.
The SBRT technique is a
relatively new procedure used for treating
localized tumors by delivering very high
doses of focused radiation. Dr. Timmerman
has successfully used the technique to treat
patients with lung and liver cancers.
“There are a number of
good treatments for prostate cancer, but
they all have some drawbacks – they’re
inconvenient; they’re invasive; or they
cause impotence, rectal injury or urinary
incontinence,” said Dr. Timmerman.
The three standard
treatment options for early stage prostate
cancer are:
• Prostatectomy, the surgical removal of the
prostate gland, which can be done with
minimally invasive techniques and robotic
assistance;
• Brachytherapy, in which doctors implant
numerous small radioactive seeds about the
size of a grain of rice into the prostate
gland using multiple large needles inserted
through the skin. Once implanted, the seeds
release their radioactivity directly into
the prostate gland; and
• External beam radiation, which involves 42
to 45 treatments administered over two or
more months, five days a week.
“This new treatment
mimics the dose deposition of brachytherapy,
but it is done noninvasively, in an
outpatient setting, without making any
incisions, needle punctures or anesthesia,”
Dr. Timmerman said. “The beauty of it is
that the patient only has to come in for
five outpatient treatments and is finished
in a week and a half.”
Dr. Timmerman has
treated 11 patients at UT Southwestern using
this new method with only minor side
effects. As part of the study, he is trying
to establish the treatment’s proper dose
protocol. He also is establishing study
sites at the University of Minnesota,
University of Colorado and at a rural
practice in South Dakota.
Health-care experts
predict that about 218,000 new cases of
prostate cancer will be diagnosed in the
U.S. this year, and more than 27,000 men
will die from the disease.
Dr. Timmerman said the
SBRT treatment might be ideal for people who
live far away from an academic medical
center or who can’t stay away from their
jobs for extended periods of time to receive
treatment or recover.
“We’re targeting this
population because they clearly need a
better treatment,” Dr. Timmerman said. “If
the treatment ends up being favorable in its
toxicity and side effects, then even ‘city
slickers’ might want to have it too.”
For Mr. Bridgewater,
“the treatment was a breeze. I didn’t have
to do anything except breathe.”
And his prognosis is
excellent. Tests show that the level of
prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in Mr.
Bridgewater’s blood, which is elevated in
men who have prostate cancer, was nearly
nonexistent.
“Actually, we are
seeing that the PSA levels in patients
undergoing this new therapy are declining
more rapidly than one would expect with
conventional treatment,” Dr. Timmerman said.
“It’s still early in the study process, but
it looks promising.”
Participants are still
being recruited for the study. To qualify,
patients must have early stage prostate
cancer and a Gleason score of 7 or below.
For more information contact Alida Perkins
at 214-645-7633.
September is Prostate
Cancer Awareness Month.
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